Army Motors Winter 2012 - Liberty Cadillac Discovered
Transcription
Army Motors Winter 2012 - Liberty Cadillac Discovered
Journal of the Milital'y VehiclePl'esel'vation - Association. - • Liberty Cadillac • Patton's Command Car • K-53 Weather Warrior • Dodge T233 Development 'P~ [· Tanksin Town - A different point of view o. Number 138 ARMY MOTORS (ISSN 0195-5632) Editorial Communications. Please submit aU material to: ARMYMOTORS P.O. Box 234 5t.Alben,Alberta, Canada T8N IN3 PnonelFal:: (780) 651-6204 e-mail: armymotors@shaw.ca Prospective authors and photographers are encolilll.ged to submit contributions in the fonn of anicles> charts> drawings and photographs. If possible> manuscripts should be typc:written and double spaced> submitted on a computer disc or transmimed via e-mail. All material becomes the property of ARMY MOTORS unless other arrangements have been made at the time of submission. The Editor reserves the exclusi\'e right to accept andlor edit submissiollS- Views expressed in published anicles are those of the contributor. The contributor is responsible to ensure that all material and any photographs submitted for publication are original works, accurate and authentic> and free from copyright or permission to reproduce wTitten material or any likeness has been granted. t AP1CNt ARMY MOTORS is published quarterly by the MILITARY VEHICLE PRESERVATION ASSOCIATION, 3305 Blue Ridge Cutoff> Independence> Missouri> US.A. 64055. A portion of each member>s dues is for a one-year subscription. ©Copyright 2012 Military Vehicle Preservation Association Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or part> by any method> without written permission of the MILITARY VEHICLE PRESERVATION ASSOCIATION and ARMY MOTORS, is prohibited by law. Printed in US.A. Postmaster> Selld address changes to ARMY MOTORS, P. O. Box 520378, Independence> Missouri> US.A. 640520378. MILITARY VEHICLE PRESERVATION ASSOCIATION (A registered U.S.A. non-profit corporation 50 I ColO»~P.O. Box 520378> Independence> Missouri> U.S.A. 640520378. Association Manager Kay Willard Ph. (816) 833-6872 Fax (816) 833-5115 1-800-365-5798 (orders only) Jeep® is a worldwide registered trademark of the Chrysler LLC. All other brands and product names are trademarks of their respective holders. ARMY MOTORS STAFF Editor Reg Hodgson Associate Editor Ian Campbell Technical Editor Uoyd White Contributing Editors Clell Ballard, Tim Scherrer, Francis G. Blake, David Doyle Combat Photo Editor Jack D. Kludt RECONN G50) Editor Uoyd White 16652 Springwater Rd>Oregon City> Oregon 97045. Ph./Fax (503) 631-2239. Design & Layout Charlie Horse Designs MVPAOFFICERS President David Welch, 726 Long Hill Dr.> Gillette> NC'.vJersey 07933. Ph. (908) 6471310, Fax (908) 647-5437> e-mail: dwekhl@aol.com Vice-President John Cheney II> 3100 Liberty-Hi Rd.>North Baltimore> Ohio, 45872. Ph. (419) 257-3202> e-mail: jcheney@eaetech.com Secretary Tom Wolboldt. 641 Warren Chapd Rd. Fleming> Ohio, 45729. Ph. (740) 374-3086 e-mail: xstnff@juno.com Treasurer Randy Withrow> 2060A Airport Rd.>Huntsville> Alabama 35801 Ph. (256) 883-3737, e-mail: randy@memorialmuseum.org Association Manager/C.O.O. Kay Willard> Ph. (816) 833-6872, e-mail: hq@mvpa.org Supply Line Editor David Doyle, P.O. Box 172287>Memphis> TN 38187> e-mail: MVPASupplyLine@aoLcom Number 138 Winter 2012 ARMY MOTORS FEATURES K-53 Workhorse of the Weather Warrior Part I by Jerry Cleveland A Find From The Past Tanks in Town 2011 by Jim Lurba by Alain Henry de Frahan 1945 Dodge T233 Part I by Fred Coldwell 2 15 17 20 General Patton's Dodge Command Car by Denny Hair, Steve Hickman, Ken Rose and Carlos Manning Liberty Cadillac by Marc Lassen .. 37 46 Naming Vehicles in the American Expeditionary Force by MAJ {Ret} Stephen C. McGeorge 55 DEPARTMENTS RECONN G503 AM Reviews Tech Talk by Lloyd White by Dean L. Kellogg, Jr., Lloyd White and Ian Campbell by Joseph H. Dutton Jr. Where in the World? 58 62 67 by Peter Wynne, Dave Aro, Glenn Camp Clive Law and Pierre /zarie .. 69 Front Cover: Driving his 1918 Nash Quad 2-ton 4x4 is Ken Kalka #32336 (Pierce, Colorado) in period uniform. His co-driver is Don Chew #9169 (Brighton, Colorado) who owns a 1917 FWD Model B 3-ton truck. The photograph was made at the Lafayette Foundation's Spring Fly-In and air show at the Platte Valley Airport near Hudson, Colorado, northeast of Denver. Photograph © courtesy of Jim Landon. During WWII the American armed forces made effect use of posters for recruiting_ Irving Coopers 'Woman's Place In War'is an outstanding example of such a poster issued by the US Army in 1944. The poster depicts a WAC weather observer in a rather glamorous pose. While it is unlikely WACs were used for weather observation in combat zones during WWII they certainly must have been employed stateside, and perhaps in England, for us Army Air Corps requirements. See Jerry Cleveland's article 'K-53 Workhorse of the Weather Warrior' on the next page. Illustration courtesy Jerry Cleveland. MVPA ONLINE: http://www.mvpa.org MVPA Office e-mail: hq@mvpa.org ARMY MOTORS e-mail: armymotors@shaw.ca /AnphQtographs (;ourtesy olthe tiberty Cadillac Collection. A while back, I had broken a taillight on my 1929 Cadillac and was seeking a replacement online. In doing so, I stumbled upon an unusual advertisement fur an OD army ordnance green, 1918 Type 57 Cadillac that, may have belonged to some general. There's one you don't see everyday! It was obviously solid, intact, and quite weathered ... right up my alley! Well, could it possibly be real? That was a heck of a question! Fortunately, the car was in a storage facility in Spokane, Washington, which is in my neck of the woods, so I could go see for myself. I rented a flat trailer and headed down the road to see what this thing was. Actual photo of a Cadillac during the Marfa Endurance Test, July 1917. This test determined what car would be used as the official car for officer's during the war. Cadillac won! When I got there, even in low light, I knew in less than one second that this car was real! Everything was exactly as is should be for an untouched survivor car. I had no idea how I could prove it was authentic but I wanted to see if I could. So we shook hands and loaded her up. She was a sight to see, up there on the trailer, going down the highway, tattered top blowing in the wind. Just beautiful! Once home I started making the rounds and found out that this was indeed something General Pershing stepping from his Cadillac command car in France. ARMY MOTORS 47 Motorpool photo taken il'l. 1919. Sam,e stencil as used on the Liberty Cadillac. very rare and virtually unheard of in the car '-'\Torld. , , none survive. Proving the car's authenticity, its provenance, meant unwiuing breaking of a taillight, I must say it turned out pretty darn good. "'Then found, Cadillac 57-A-704 was in 'survivor' condjtion, with an old single overcoal. of aD green paint over a first coat of aD, and complete with military markings still in place. Amazingly, the car absolutely everything, and I was indeed challenged (and motivated) by a few highly placed individuals untouched origlnaJ condition, There was no sign of another WWI Cadillac anywhere and this one \vas essentially forgotten for 90 years. The word from the top down on pretty much all fronts was, hadn't a single rust bubble and is perfect!)' preserved to 'prove it.' That took three years of intense research to reunite CadilhlC 57-A-704 with its military history. Today it is the only verified surviving Great War in as it will remain. CadilJac cars were used and modified by the Cadillac to have served in France and made it home ll1ilitar>' as early as 1904; some in the form of armored cars with Colt machine guns mounted on top. In 1915, to evaluate their performance, Royal P. Davidson againl Considering commanded this odyssey started with the a fleet of eight military modified Cadillac cars on a convoy frol11 Chicago to San Francisco. The all Cadillac column included; a reconnaissance SCOLItvehicle with instrurnents for observation; h\'o wireless radio communications vehicles; a field cooking complete vehicle with fireless cookers; a hospital vehicle v..lith operating tables and an X-ray D1achine; a balloon destroyer; a quartermaster's car; and a fully armored vehicle, - the Davidson-Armored Cadillac. The armored Cadillac was capable of 70 miles per hour (112 km/h) when the roads permitted.! The Davidson. tlYI1"I.ored Cadillac. 48 ARMY MOTORS The U.S. entered W\,yI in April 1917, and Cadillac 57-A-704 was one of the first Cadillac's to be used by the AEF on French soil, with record of only one prior Cadillac having made it across the pond. Cadillac 57-A-704 arrived with its original owner/driver in Brest, France, in August 1917. According to the build sheet, acquired from the Cadillac archives, it was shipped :Tom the Cadillac Motor Car Company in Detroit ),jjchigan on 31 July 1917 CO Inglis M. Uppercu, a Cadillac distributor in _;ew York City; ordered by Dr. John Hopkins Denison, who took delivery on 09 August, before the Type 57 was available to the public. If it hadn't been procured by and delivered directly to J.H. Denison a detailed account of its use during WWT would have been near impossible to document. As war production increased, and shipping space became a serious problem, Cadillac cars were shipped disassembled in crates direct to ports and motor pools. Dr. Denison was the grandson of the famous Mark Hopkins, president of William College for forty years, and known affectionately as 'The Great Educator.' Dr. J.H. Dension was a congregational An early example of a military modified Cadillac. of a number of books. He was, to say the least, a patriot to the American cause. At age 46, and having to walk with a cane due to a lame leg, he procured 57-A704 and then commenced to help create the AEF, as we know it. Going into WWI the U. S. had few programs in place to support an army of two million men fighting thousands of miles away from home. An army of this size had never been so far away from its origin. minister and historian, and also found fame as the author Dr. I.H. Denison Cadillac limousine in France having a flat tire repaired. ARMY MOTORS 49 Canadian Cadillac with right hand drive. Original photos by army photographers, and numerous published documents, prove J.H. Denison traveled to France with 57-A-704 in the official employ of the AEF - YMCA. He is listed as a 'Purchasing Agent' and secretary for the AEF - YMCA on his service documents, as well as numerous other titles and responsibilities. His war record with this organization puts him in the earliest group of men in France where he moved among the top brass of the AEF. The American YMCA was an integral part of the US Army in W\AIl, officially commissioned under General Order Series 33 and under the command of General Pershing. Pershing initially wanted the AEF- YMCA secretaries to be officers, however, the YMCA deemed it more appropriate that the secretaries not be held to the strict division between officers and enlisted men. It was decided that such a division would hamper their ability to assist the enlisted men, which was the primary objective of the AEF-YMCA. Dr. Denison \...,asfirst stationed in Brest) France in charge of the Brest YMCA, where more than 750,000 American doughboys eventually landed. He and his Cadillac were also stationed at the front, near Chalon, during the second Battle of the Marne. This was the last great Genllan offensive and the turning point in the war. Dr. Denison was stationed approximately ten Canadian Cadillac at lIi,ny Ridge. 50 ARMY MOTORS Military Cadillacs photographed during a cross countly military expedition el1route to San Francisco. A Davidson annored Cadillac is positioned in Lhe cenler of fonnatio1'l. miles to the east of Chateau- Thierry and Belleau Woods. It was during this battle that the US Marines earned their nickname {The Devil Dogs.' Denison was at the (i'ont for the entire battle during July and August J 918, which was the first major battle in the AEF history, and Cadillac 57-A-704 was also there. Denison was then commissioned to create the him to do so has been found. He drove Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt Jr. and Major Frink on a two-month expedition from September through November 1918. Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt Jr. was the first American wornan sent abroad for waf service after Pershing. This makes her the first \voman in American history to be in a foreign country of war an official capacity. 111 The establishment of the leave system was a creation pure and simple; nothing of this sort had ever been done before. The US Army sought to have leave 'Leave System' for the US Army. The official military telegram commanding the AEF-YMCA and reached Paris only a few weeks by areas in safe and remote locations, avvay fTom Paris and combat zones. That \,\Iasthe army's plan and that was as far as the Army's General Order went. Execution of the order \·vas turned over the AEF- YM:CA, and the AEF- Ylv!CA turned over the brunt of that work to Dr. Denison and Mrs. Roosevelt. They were to find The Liberty Cadillac with Dr. Denison, in uniform, at the \.vheel. March 1918, Aix us Bains, France. They were watching the firsl organized AEF baseball game in hislory! ARMY MOTORS 51 Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt .11: in France 1917. She created the wOInans uniform she is weanng. FroHl view oflhe Liberty Cadillac. accommodations around France and procure them for American troops as places for rest and recovery. Mrs. Roosevelt referenced 57·A·704 and Denison in her 1959 autobiography stating, "When the army asked so that all truck builders would manufacture the same truck with interchangeable parts. The government test in July 1917 was to determine what cars the military should use. The test proceeded the Y to establish h.venty more leave areas as soon as possible, f was sent with four other Y people on a tour of to southern and central France. "Vewent in luxury in a big Texas summer. The Cadillac performed almost open Cadillac touring car belonging to Dr. I.H. Denison. Why did the U.S. Government choose Cadillac as the official car for officers in \>VWI?The government conducted an official test of numerous vehicles in July 1917, less than two weeks prior to the build date of 57· II rUIl varioLls makes of cars across the desert for 5000 miles, on dirt roads or no roads, and in the heat of the flawlessly and only required a thirty·cent ran spring and 1·1/2 gallons of water. The Cadillac seven· passenger touring car and the seven-passenger sedan were chosen for army officers. Dodge cars were chosen for the enlisted men. Approximately 2000 Cadillacs were pressed into military service by wars end. A-704. The test was conducLcd at an airfield in Marfa, Texas as a result of Pershing's experience in the border Tn mid 1917 blue and grey were still the official colors of the US Military. According to Military war with Mexico of 1916. While there, Pershing had Cadillacs, Dodges and many other cars, as well as a large fleet of trucks in action. The Punitive Expedition (1916·1917) was the first time the US Army went to Motors, "Tn the early days of chasing Pancho Villa il1to Mexico there were 110 established standards for procuring motor cars for the army Much like buying horses, officers simply bought what they desired." If there were war using mechanized standards, which are doubtful, none have been found. vehicles instead of horses and mules. This proved to be very problematic from a Leading up to vV\,VI, standards remained lax. In mechanics' or engineers' standpoint September 1917 (one month after 57·A·704 arrived in as there were no standards for procurement in [916 and Pershing ended up with many different makes of trucks and cars. He literally had miJlions of different car and truck parts with no interchangeability! \~~,en he returned to Washington he reported on his problems and by 1917 the Liberty Truck, as it would be knO\\ln, \'\'as designed 52 ARMY MOTORS France) the first reference to standards for painting, numbering, and marking Illotor vehicles was issued in a General Order by Pershing. The order required aJl vehicles to be painted Olive Drab (aD) green to a specific specification. This war was the first incident of the arrny's use of aD green. Prior to that the most common army color in service was blue and gray) dating back to the Civil War and earlier. Cadillac 57-A-704 was ordered in dark blue having a build date prior to this order. It was stripped of its blue paint and painted 00 green upon arrival at a military motor pool, likely in 1919. Discovered, was a photograph taken in March 1918 of a blue Cadillac at Aix-les-Bains in the French Alps, the first experimental leave area. This was where Dr. Denison and 57-A-704 were stationed at the time. The photo shows the blue Cadillac, still sporting its factory original tires, with the driver in uniform, watching the first organized AEF baseball game in our military's history. As it stands today, 57-A-704 is an untouched survivor car. A bullet was shot through the driver's side fender as evidenced by the hole in front of the driver's floorboard. It went through two layers of steel and left its imprint in the second layer. It appears to have been of high velocity and entered at a steep trajectory. The imprint is an excellent match to a 7.92 mm \,ywI German machine gun bullet. If the hole is indeed from the war it seems logical that a shooter would have been leading the driver and a miss would have hit this area. Also likely, it could have been strafed from the air due to the steep trajectory of the bullet entry. A German pilot would not hesitate at the chance to shoot up a staff car. The hole is clearly ancient, and with 57-A-704 present for one major battle, it is likely that it was sustained during the second Battle of the Marne. The tattered remains Of the military khaki top are still attached to the top bows. The layers of paint on the car are black primer, a coat of 00 coat. These marking include; Air Service Stars between the doors, 'For Official Use Only' on the front doors, and U.S.A. #33863 on both sides of the hood and at the rear of the car. The military markings would not have been painted on the car until after it was delivered to a military ordnance depot. They would have been updated as necessary by the military. The letters 'U.S.A.' were generally not used during """"'I (U.S. was the standard), and 'For Official Use Only: was generally not seen on vehicles until 1919. It can be deduced that the markings were placed on 57-A-704 no earlier than 1919. Also, the rather unusual stencil used to paint 'For Official Use Only' on the front doors is one that has been found in numerous original motor pool photos taken in 1919. This coincides with Dr. Denison's returning to the U.S.A. after the war in July 1919 and the car being absorbed through a motor pool for ongoing military use. It would remain in service for the following seventeen years. After tl,e war 57-A-704 continued to live its life in 00 green. \iVhere it was stationed after """"'I is unknown. It stayed in service for a total of nearly 20 years before it was finally retired and sold from surplus in Southern California on 01 January 1936. According to the original registration papers on that date the first civilian owner, Major M.e. Bradley, took possession. Bradley entered the National Guard at Los Angeles in 1925 as a captain and was assigned to the Los Angeles Headquarters of the 160th Infantry Regiment. green) with ordnance markings and a second coat of 00 green over the first. The second coat of 00 green has protected the military markings on the original Liberty Cadillac as it is today. An untouched survivor. ARMY MOTORS 53 Bullet hole through the Liberty Cadillac. Left front fender just in front of the driver's feet. Or-dnance mar-kings on the hood. The National Guard gave Bradley access to surplus ordnance that he collected with great vigor! He eventually assembled one of the world's greatest and earliest WWI collections, which included airplanes, tanks, liberty trucks, ambulances, motorcycles, and Cadillac 57-A-704. He kept the collection in Burbank, California until the late sixties, which is largely the reason why this Great War Cadillac remains so beautifully preserved after more than nine decades. Today, Cadillac 57-A-704 is the only original WWI Cadillac survivor, having never been touched or altered, and it is the only military Cadillac with a verified war record in France during the Great War. The profound historic importance cannot be overemphasized. Discovering and protecting the history and provenance of this national treasure has been an honor. The Air Service SLar, located on both sides of the Liberty Cadillac, between the dooys. It appears the Liberty Cadillac was used by the Air Service after the war. It remained in military service until 1936. FooulOte 1. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Davidson- Cadillac_anna red_car> Editor's note: Marc Lassen can be contacted at: <libertycadillac@gmail.com> Ph. (360) 797-7300 To contact the Liberty Cadillac Team please write Liberty Cadillac P.O. Box 626 Carlsborg, Washington, U.S.A. 98324 If you would like to learn more, and see more, visit <http://www.libertycadillac.com/> Original top bows of the Liberty Cadillac, with tattered WWI military khaki. 54 ARMY MOTORS